Henry Alcock (1717-1812) was an Irish politician. [1]
Alcock was educated at Trinity College, Dublin. [2] He was M.P. for Clonmines in County Wexford from 1761 to [3] 1768; and Waterford City from 1783 to 1797; for Fethard in County Wexford in 1798.
Gorey is a market town in north County Wexford, Ireland. It is beside the main M11 Dublin to Wexford road. The town is also connected to the railway network along the same route. Local newspapers include the Gorey Guardian and Gorey Echo.
Patrick J. Prendergast FIEI, MRIA, FREng is the Provost of Trinity College Dublin.
Michael Warren is an Irish sculptor who produces site-specific public art.
John George PC, QC was an Irish politician and judge.
Reverend William Frederick Archdall Ellison FRAS was an Irish clergyman, Hebrew scholar, organist, avid amateur telescope maker, and, from 1918 to 1936, director of Armagh Observatory in Armagh, Northern Ireland. He was the father of Mervyn A. Ellison, the senior professor of the School of Cosmic Physics at Dunsink Observatory from 1958 to 1963.
William Archer Redmond sat for Wexford as a member of the Home Rule Party led by Isaac Butt from 1872 to 1880, and was the father of the Irish Parliamentary Leader John Redmond.
Arthur Alcock Rambaut was an Irish astronomer.
Karin Dubsky is a German-Irish marine ecologist working in Trinity College Dublin, notable as an environmental activist, the coordinator and co-founder of Coastwatch Europe, an environmental NGO and a member of the European Environmental Bureau.
Sir Frederick Flood, 1st Baronet, KC, was an Irish lawyer and politician. He was a Member of the Irish Parliament from 1776 until 1801, and then later a Member of the Parliament from 1801 until 1818. Although Flood opposed the Act of Union 1801 that merged the Kingdoms of Ireland and Great Britain, he sat as a member of the united Parliament in London until his retirement.
Thomas Joseph Walsh was an Irish doctor, writer, and founder and director of the Wexford Opera Festival.
William Congreve Alcock was an Irish parliamentarian from Waterford.
The Very Rev. Alexander Alcock, MA was Dean of Lismore from 1725 until 1747: his son, John was Dean of Ferns from 1747 until 1769; while another, Alexander, was Archdeacon of Lismore from 1753 until 1787.
The Very Rev. John Alcock, MA was Dean of Ferns from 1747 until 1769. His father, Alexander Alcock, was Dean of Lismore from 1725 until 1747.
Bartholomew Vigors (1644–1721) was an Anglican priest in Ireland in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries.
Michael John Keatinge (1793–1877), also Keating, was a nineteenth century Irish Anglican priest. He argued in 1827 that the economic problems of Ireland were largely caused by the system of letting land, with which government should not interfere.
Alexander Alcock was an Irish Anglican priest.
John Alcock was an Irish Anglican priest in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Latham Coddington Warren, MA was Archdeacon of Lismore from 1896 until 1912.
John Alcock (1733–1817) was an Anglican priest in Ireland during the late 18th and early 19th centuries.
Charles Huson (1712–1777) was an Irish Anglican priest.
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